The Luis Arraez trade is getting embarrassing for the Twins

Arraez has THREE five-hit games this month. The most five-hit games by any player in a career since 1956 is ten by Pete Rose.
The Luis Arraez trade is getting embarrassing for the Twins
The Luis Arraez trade is getting embarrassing for the Twins /

Luis Arraez looks like a cinch to win the National League batting title and he could threaten to become the first .400 hitter since Ted Williams in 1941. Meanwhile, Pablo Lopez, the right-hander the Twins received by trading Arraez to the Marlins, has been an average starting pitcher. 

Monday night was the ultimate in-your-face for the Twins as Arraez went 5-for-5 while Lopez was the losing pitcher in Minnesota's 9-3 loss to the Red Sox. The loss dropped the Twins a game below .500 (36-37) while the Marlins won to improve to 42-31, the third-best record in the National League. 

At this point, it's getting embarrassing for the Twins as Arraez pushed his batting average back up to .400 while Lopez's latest meh start gave him a 4.40 ERA. Not exactly the stuff of a high-end starting the pitcher the Twins wanted.

But wait, it gets worse. 

Arraez leads the majors in hits (102), batting average (.400) and on-base percentage (.400). He ranks sixth in OPS (.941) and only 12 offensive players have a higher WAR than his 2.7. For perspective, Shohei Ohtani's offensive WAR is 3.0. The best offensive WAR on the Twins belongs to Carlos Correa Byron Buxton Willi Castro at 1.4. 

Lopez ranks 52nd among qualified starters in ERA (4.40) and his 1.0 WAR is 103rd among all pitchers and 62nd among starting pitchers. So in other words, the Twins traded one of the game's most valuable bats for an average starting pitcher. 

Sure, Lopez is third in the big leagues with 110 strikeouts, and his 11 strikeouts per nine innings ranks sixth, But beyond that, after a promising start, he's been average. 

Sign up: Subscribe to our MINNESOTA TWINS newsletters

What Arraez is doing is better than anyone expected, but it's not like he came out of nowhere. He's the same guy who won the AL batting title last season with a .316 average. And because he's only 26 years old, improvement should've been expected this season and he'll likely only get better as he enters the prime of his career. 

What's crazy is that the second-best qualified batting average in the majors is Ronald Acuna at .325. That's seventy-five points behind Arraez. Donovan Solano leads the Twins with a .282 batting average. That's 118 points behind Arraez. 

Arraez has nearly double the hits as Minnesota's hit leader (Correa with 52). 

This could go down as one of the best displays of batsmanship in MLB history. Consider that hitting .370 for a full season has only been done 12 times since 1941.

  1. Ted Williams: .406 in 1941
  2. Tony Gwynn: .394 in 1994
  3. George Brett: .390 in 1980
  4. Ted Williams: .388 in 1957
  5. Rod Carew: .388 in 1977
  6. Larry Walker: .379 in 1999
  7. Stan Musial: .376 in 1948
  8. Tony Gwynn: .372 in 1997
  9. Nomar Garciaparra: .372 in 2000
  10. Todd Helton: .372 in 2000
  11. Ichiro Suzuki: 372 in 2004
  12. Barry Bonds: .370 in 2002

Equally as incredible is that Arraez has THREE five-hit games this month. The most five-hit games by any player in a career since 1956 is ten by Pete Rose, according to Baseball Reference. Kirby Puckett had five hits in a game six times in his Hall of Fame career. Paul Molitor did it seven times. 

Arraez is a hitting machine and the Twins may have made a gigantic mistake by letting him go in an effort to quench the franchise's thirst for a high-end starting pitcher. 


Published
Joe Nelson
JOE NELSON

Title: Bring Me The Sports co-owner, editor Email: joe@bringmethenews.com Twitter: @JoeBMTN Education: Southwest Minnesota State University Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota Expertise: All things Minnesota sports Nelson has covered Minnesota sports for two decades, starting his media career in sports radio. He worked at small market Minnesota stations in Marshall and St. Cloud before joining one of the nation's highest-rated sports stations, KFAN-FM 100.3 in the Twin Cities. There, he was the producer of the top-rated mid-morning sports show with Minnesota Vikings announcer Paul Allen.  His radio experience helped blossom a career as a sports writer, joining Minneapolis-based Bring Me The News in 2011.  Nelson and Adam Uren became co-owners of Bring Me The News in 2018 and have since more than tripled the site's traffic and launched Bring Me The Sports in cooperation with the Sports Illustrated/FanNation umbrella. Nelson has covered the Super Bowl and numerous training camps, NFL combines, the MLB All-Star Game and Minnesota playoff games, in addition to the day-to-day happenings on and off the field of play.  Nelson also has extensive knowledge of non-sports subjects, including news and weather. He works closely with Bring Me The News meteorologist Sven Sundgaard to produce a bevy of weather and climate information for Minnesota readers.  Nelson helped launch and manage the Bring Me The News Radio Network, which provided more than 50 radio stations around Minnesota with daily news, sports and weather reports from 2011-17.